Lunch atop a Skyscraper (New York Construction Workers Lunching on a Crossbeam) is a famous black-and-white photograph taken by Charles C. Ebbets during construction of the RCA Building (renamed as the GE Building in 1986) at Rockefeller Center in New York City, United States.
The photograph depicts eleven men eating lunch, seated on a girder with their feet dangling hundreds of feet above the New York City streets. Ebbets took the photo on September 29, 1932 on the 69th floor of the RCA Building during the last months of construction, and it appeared in the New York Herald Tribune on October 2 in its Sunday photo supplement.
The copyright owner of the photograph, the Bettman Archive, did not recognize Charles C. Ebbets as the photographer until October 2003 (reportedly after months of investigation by a private investigation firm). However, authorship of the photograph, popular as a poster, was listed as 'Unknown' on many prints. The photograph has been frequently misattributed to Lewis Hine,[1] whose earlier work documenting the construction of the Empire State Building in 1931 (see, for example, Hine's Icarus atop Empire State Building) has a compositional, though arguably not thematic, resemblance.[2]
In recent years, the identities of most of the subjects have been provided by their descendents or relatives. Counting from the left, the first man is Matty O'Shaughnessy from County Galway, Ireland.[3] The third man has been identified as Austin Lawton of King's Cove, Newfoundland, though this same man is also identified as Sheldon London of New York, New York, by his great-niece, and is further identified as Ralph Rawding of New York, New York by his granddaughter. The fifth man is Claude Stagg of Catalina, Newfoundland. The seventh man has been identified by his daughter as John Doucette. The eighth man has been identified by a nephew as Francis Michael Rafferty; the ninth man is his lifelong best friend, Stretch Donahue.[4] The tenth man is Thomas Norton (born Naughton) of County Galway, Ireland. The eleventh man has been identified as both Patrick "Sonny" Glynn of County Galway, Ireland[3] and Gusti Popovič, a Slovak from then Czechoslovakia.[5] There was another name associated with the 11th man. David Cherry. Another photograph taken by Ebbets the same day, Men Asleep on a Girder, shows the same workers napping on the beam.